Page IO Portland/Obsei ver Thursday February 17, 1972 /’()/{n. i \ P oitsi/ti i:it S a lu te s ... Youth of the Week V Dave J. LaBrousse, a juniu. at Pensvn Polytechnic is l the Observer’ s Youth of trie Week for February. La-1 Biousse is one of 14 scholar-athletes who received honors! last yea: in November from the.Mu tnomah A thleticC lubT He is a two year transfei student fr om North Catholic! High .school. Despite his extra c u .ric u la r activities in -| eluding membership on the varsity basketball, baseball! and football teams, LaBrousse finds time toenjoy fishing| and the outdooi s, his favorite past times. I Besides maintaining i 3.u ave. age (B ), he alsodevvtes liv in e of his Christmas vacation time to his membership Iin the key Club (food to needy fam ilies). LaBrousse plans to furthei his education w nen he leaves Benson, but is undecided about which L’nivei sity or field of education. ______ I Courtesy of ® Pacific Northwest Bell If you don’t see your merchant’s ad in The Observer, ask him why. Juillard State’s Quartet population presented shifts I he Friends of Chambei Music Conceit Series is pi oud to present the J u illia id Stung Quartet, quartet-in-1esxlence ef the J ui 11 i.ird School of M u ­ sic in New Yo k, performing in Portland on F e b ru a ry22, 1972, ui the Did Main Audito­ rium at P ort I and S tate Un ive r - sity (I620S.W. Park).The per­ il rmance begins at 8:30 pun., and tickets are $4.50 general admission, $3.50 fo r students. They w ill p e r f o r m works by R ichter, V erdi, and Beetho­ ven. T h e extraordinary u n i t y w h ic h the J u illia ix l Quai tet achieves is one of dynamic in­ dividuality, which intensities the tension between the one and the many. I he J u illia rd 's un- i n h ib t e d p e r f o r m a n c e s crackle with e le c tric ity ' as gamble on a promised tusion that can be almost nuclear in its explosiveness. I The Quartet’ s fir s t vio - l| lin is t, Robert Mann, was born m Portland, ami is an alumnus of the J u illia rd School of Mu- | sic. He has been a strong par- t'Cinant in the quartet for more than twenty years.Second v io­ lin is t. E a rl C arlyss, also a J u illia rd alumnus, is a native of Chicago. Samuel Rhodes, com poser-violinist; was born in New York C ity, and gra­ duated from Princeton Uni­ versity with a M aster of Fine A rts. He plays aNieolo Arrian nude ¡n 1663, which is owned by theC orcoranG allery in Washington, D. C. Claus Adam, from Indonesia, at­ tended schools in Europe and has worked with the National O rchestral Association, th e M ine i.o lie Sym »bony, 11 I the New Music Quartet. He, too, is an acknowledged com­ poser. Since the J u illia rd Quartet began its activities in 1940, they have built upa repertoire of over 135 works, ranging from the classics to the mod- e r n s , as well as performing many works of American com­ posers. They achieve magni- f l e a n t harmony, purity of sound and deep penetration in­ to the conceptions of the com­ posers. NOTICE NAACP •o n Buford Buford visits Portland Lion Bufoid ot the Baltim ore O rioles was in Portland this weekend. Buford and three othei major league playeis. B ill Melton of the Chicago W hite Sox. Mel Stottlemyer of the New Y o r k Yankees, and B r u c e kelson ol the P itts­ burgh Pirates, held baseball clinics in Oregon. C 11 n ic s were held at Lewis and C lark College and at P acific Univer­ sity. Attending were coaches and players from Oregon col­ leges and high schools. Buford fount! a (ew minutes in his busy schedule to v is it his aunt, M rs. Reverend O. B. W illia m s. Buford told the Observer that he always enjoys visiting Oregon. He played for I Cl A and c a m e here frequently to play teams from Oregon State U niversity and the U niversity of Oregon. Buford left Portland Sunday night to pick up his fam ily ui L o s Angeles. He w a s due in M iam i to begin spring training on February 17th. Buford be­ lieves the O rioles w ill have a good season and w ill win the pennant again this year. 1 Numbers you should! I know for aid I | 1 1 1 1 1 1 I | | | I | I | | | I 1 1 I I 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 9 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 | | Abortion Information and R eferral Service................... ACLU................................................ AFSC ............................................ A ir Pollution C o n tro l........ ,...233-7176 Albina M u lti Service Centei A M A ................................................... Better Business Bureau ......... Buckman Dental C H n ic................... Concentrated Employment Program ....288-8391 Community Care .............. Consumer C redit Counseling .. . Consumer P rotection.............. Contact C enter.................... County H ospital...................... D ra ft Counseling (days).......... (days and evenings)........... F ire D epartm ent.................. FISH (emergency aid)..................... Food Stamps......................... ...229*6920 Four-C (4-C, Child Care). Legal Aid downtown................... A lb in a ................................... Southeast................................ Legal C lin ic (Albina)..................... LIFE C enter............................... Mental Health C lin ic ........................ M ilita ry Counseling........................ Model C itie s ............................ NAACP.............................. NAACP C redit Union.................... Our House (drug assistance)..... Outside In C lin ic ............................. People’ s Dental C lin ic .............. People's Health C lin ic ............... Planned Parenthood ......................... P M S C ..7 ^................................ POIC ............................................. . ..287-4196 Poison C enter.............................. P o lic e .......................................... ..-226-7551 Portland Observer ..................... . ..283-2486 Problem Solvers (legal akl fo r m inors).................. Senior Adult C itiz e n s ...................... Suicide Prevention.......................... ...227-0403 Switchboard................................ Tax Resistance............................ T rl-M e t (C ity bus)............................ Urban A c tio n ................................. Urban League............................. Urban League (field office)............ ...288-6517 VD C lin ic ........................... ......... 227-8411 W e lfa re ....................................... ...229-6783 Women’ s l.ib e ra tio n .......................... ...235-4939 I I I 1 1 1 I I I 1 I 1 Governor Tom McCall is­ sued a proclamation that Feb­ ruary is Heart Month in Ore­ gon. He said that this is the month when ail residents of Oregon should be thankful fo r the progress made by tne Oregon Heart Association in saving lives of thousands of residents from heart attack, stroke, high blood piessuie, rheumatic heart disease, and congenital heart defects. Ihe proclamation. Issued from Salem, declares that heart and blood vessel diseas­ es a fflic t m oie than 270,0X1 Oregonians, and are respon­ sible lo r more deaths than all other causes combined. Citizens were urged by Gov­ ernor McCall to support the Oregon Heart Association, in order to speed advances which have already resulted in tne savings of thousands of lives. The proclamation reads: "WHEREAS, e i • yen more than 10,000 Oregonians die from heart and blood ves­ sel diseases, which also af­ flic t more than 270,000 c iti­ zens, ranking it as the great­ est cause of death and dis­ a bility in our state, ’ ANO WHEREAS, these diseases cost Oregon business and industry $40 m illio n anu- ally, in lost in come, "ANO WHEREAS, the Ore­ gon Heart Association’ s re ­ lentless battle against our state s leading health hazard has lelped reduce the death rate from heait and blood vessel diseases by 18)g since 1950 foi persons under 65, through advances and preven­ tion and treatment, THEREFORE, I, Governor i McCall, proclaim Feb­ ruary Oregon Heart Month, i f 1 I n heart month * 1 C The \r ^Your n om ah, M a lh e u r md J e lte i s n counties have non-white |»er- centages of fio in 5.4 to in . iPrices Good W ednesday IVeivspaper 16 thru Sat lu0h Or com McCall Oregon's population has shifted from ru ra l to urban living in the last decade. t his conclusion was made by the Oregon Buieau of Cov­ et nmental Resources and Ser­ vice in a 110 page report on population and housing ti ends. Mien Id win F lowers and Lloulsa I hutchoi Flow ers, who were U.S. Census Bureau ftguies niai I led in V ie to lla , Bi Kish Columbia ui 1882. See picture show that urban resklents and story on page 2. make up o7 percent of Ore­ gon's I97o population. th is compaies with 62 percent in I960 and 54 iMicent in 1950. Most urban dw elleis live in the W illamette V alley, and half of the state's population is located in Portland and Eugene. With the advantages of city living come pioblem s such is sewage anil refuse disposal, tra ffic congestion anil health dangeis. Mentally retarded, NAACP Meeting scheduled lo . F e b iu a ry 20. at 4:00 m h.< e lderly o disabled persons .tpozml until February 27, „ 4:00 p a n . « 2752 Ñ w u - are mo e numerous. I liese 1 I .I II I S , i Ills Cassou p ie sid e n t. problems requite m oie |»ut>- he expenditures than in ru ia l areas. E ighteen |iei cent ot the 1970 state population is 15 to 25 years old. | he numbei of («rsons in (hat age gioup Increased 81 percent in the last 20 years. I he nuinlwi of children has leveled off ac­ ross the state. Oregon's population is incieasing by natural growth and new m igration. About 164,000 |